YOURS (UK)

Alan Titchmarsh

With a book just out and a new show on ITV, we chat to Alan Titchmarsh about family, health, challengin­g litter louts and how gardening has been his therapy over the last year

- By Jane Oddy

After spending much of the last five decades celebratin­g the beauty of green space in books, articles and TV shows and encouragin­g people to enjoy nature, Alan Titchmarsh is becoming increasing incensed by littering.

Alan (71) reveals that he recently challenged a group of young men after seeing them carelessly toss a can out of their car window into the road.

He says: “It makes me so cross. I picked up the empty can walked over and handed it back to them through the window at the traffic lights. I said, ‘You’ve dropped this’. My daughter said I should never have done it because it was a car-load of youths. She said I was irresponsi­ble because at the very least I could have been punched. The lights then changed to green, off they shot in the car and they threw it out about 50 yards later. But I had tried to do my bit.” Alan is passionate about looking after the landscape and the countrysid­e: “We have a road near us which is terrible and has rubbish everywhere. I said to my wife Alison, ‘If it doesn’t get cleared soon, I’m going

‘The last year has made me very aware we only come this way once. Don’t rush so much’

down with a cone, a black plastic bag and my litter pick and I’m going to do it myself’. Mercifully it has since been cleared but it makes me angry when things are not looked after. You can’t just talk about the bigger picture, global warming and climate change without looking at the smaller things which contribute to it.”

Alan believes we can all make a difference to help the environmen­t. “I am so lucky to do a job I love and something I believe in. A lot of people think, ‘Oh gardening, you do it because you haven’t got the brains to do anything else’. They can say that if they want, but I know gardening is at the sharp end of conservati­on. We can make a difference at a local level,” he says.

So how has life been for Alan over the last year? He reveals that green therapy has been key to his mental health. “Nature has done me the world of good. It’s been my salvation and kept me sane.

Just being outside in fresh air with the butterflie­s and the birds. I was there in the garden every day, all day,” he says.

He also feels even closer to his wife Alison. “For months it was just Alison and me and it was lovely. She is my best friend; very much so. We celebrate our 46th anniversar­y this year. What’s the secret? A tolerant wife! She even filmed my shows in lockdown.” However, the prolonged separation from his two-grown up daughters Polly and Camilla, and his four grandchild­ren, has made him even more appreciati­ve of his family. “I love giving my family and friends a hug. I am a tactile soul. It’s very hard for grandparen­ts not to hug and just the whole thing of having the family round you and close to you is so important for wellbeing. We really need tactility and it is very underrated in terms of sanity,” he says.

So what will be first on the agenda when restrictio­ns ease? “Dining around the table with all the family. I miss sharing meals and hospitalit­y. It’s been hard, but hopefully, it’s not long now.” He also reflects that the last year has reinforced his belief that he’s in the right job. “I so enjoy being outside. It’s part of my daily life. I have four acres of garden and a wildflower meadow so I got very fit and I lost about one-and-a-half stone in two months, purely through gardening!” But he continues wryly, “Then I broke my ankle in September – I slipped on wet grass. The garden can be a dangerous place! I was on crutches for six weeks so I put a bit of the weight back on again.”

But as spring gets in full flow Alan is relishing all the gardening challenges. “My seeds are lined up and my potatoes are sprouting,” he laughs.

Considered among the most respected gardening experts in the nation, Alan regularly divulges his tips to eager, greenfinge­red fans. His latest book, Grow Your Own Fruit and Veg, a revised and updated edition, is a practical guide and includes tips on growing everything from herbs, baby veg, salads and everyday fruits to gourmet or unusual varieties. Also included is how to make them fit into small gardens.

“It’s astonishin­g what you can grow in containers or you can just buy sprouting vegetable kits and put them on your windowsill,” he says.

In addition, he is currently working on his 71st book, a romantic novel, which will take him around five months to write. Plus a brand new series, Spring Into Summer, has just started on ITV. Set in Hampshire it sees Alan celebratin­g the great outdoors and includes celebrity guests getting involved in some of the planting,

‘Being outside in the fresh air has been my salvation and has kept me sane’

nature features and food tastings.

So what’s been the secret to his success? “I have always followed my dreams. I was lucky enough that my parents let me become a gardener and I have had wonderful people in my life to help me all along the way.

“The last year has also made me very aware that we only come this way once. Don’t rush quite so much. Take time to sit quietly and look around and learn from what you see out of the window. It’s been so refreshing to be at home. The downside has been not seeing the grandchild­ren enough, but being at home and on my piece of earth has been lovely.”

■ Grow your Own Fruit and Veg by Alan Titchmarsh, out now, BBC Books, £18.99

■ ITV’s Spring Into Summer started on Easter Monday and runs for nine episodes.

Catch up at ITV Hub

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 ??  ?? Above: Alan in his new show, Spring into Summer. Below: with Border Collie friend Finn
Above: Alan in his new show, Spring into Summer. Below: with Border Collie friend Finn
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 ??  ?? Alan with his wife of nearly 46 years, Alison
Alan with his wife of nearly 46 years, Alison
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